Our favourite porridge, and left over porridge in pancakes, muffins, and waffles

I’ve taken a while to write this because posting a ‘recipe’ for porridge seemed more than a bit ridiculous, but I decided to go ahead for two reasons. One is that I think this is just a little bit different from the good old porridge many of us grew up with, and the other is that I wanted to write about the wonderful things you can do with the leftovers!

We ate porridge a lot when I was a child, particularly in cooler weather. My mother made it with just rolled oats, water and salt, and we served it with brown sugar and milk, or sometimes honey. Some of my earliest porridge memories are of serving it with the milk delivered in glass bottles with foil lids (and I know I’m showing my age here!) and wanting the top of the milk so I got the cream in my porridge. Occasionally, failing cream, we would add a little knob of butter and stir it in, amazingly delicious if you’ve never tried it!

I also remember the porridge bubbling away for ages, and often getting stuck and a bit brown on the bottom. I always liked to scrape the browned bits, but I don’t remember us doing anything with any porridge leftovers.

As a sidenote, there’s a memorable scene in Jane Eyre where Jane is begging for food, and a woman gives her a crust of porridge on the grounds that ’T’pig doesn’t want it’, which has always struck me as a dreadful dismissal of all the uses for left over porridge!

So, my porridge… It’s actually not hugely different from the way I had it as a child, the two improvements, I think, are making it with half rolled and half steel cut oats, and soaking the oats and water together overnight.

You will notice this is still classic water based porridge. There are many recipes for making porridge with varying quantities of various milks; I tend not to mostly because milk porridge is both more likely to burn, and more likely to boil over – if you have the time to stand there with an eagle eye however, by all means increase the milk quantity. You can use any you like, but if not using cows milk, then coconut is lovely, especially when serving with banana…

This makes enough to serve four generously, or me and a couple of children, with leftovers for the recipes to follow. The pancakes recipe in particular is quite flexible, just adjust the amount of flour depending on how much porridge you have to use up.

Our favourite porridge

80g steel cut oats

80g rolled oats

3 1/2 c water

1/2 c milk (optional)

1 tsp sea salt

Combine both oats with the water in a medium saucepan, cover, and leave overnight. The next morning, uncover, and cook over a medium heat until it comes to the boil. Reduce heat to low and simmer for about ten minutes, until thickened and the rolled oats are breaking down. Add the salt and milk (or an extra 1/2 cup of water), and cook gently, stirring often, until very thick and creamy and the steel cut oats are tender with just a bit of a bite.

Tip the porridge in a bowl. Crack in the eggs and use a whisk to break up and roughly combine. Add the sugar and milk and whisk again. Finally, add flour and baking powder and whisk until smooth. The texture should be similar to a pikelet or American style pancake batter, though a bit lumpier. If you use a smaller amount of porridge then add an extra 1/4-1/2 cup of flour until you have a thick but pourable batter.

Melt the butter in an electric frying pan or heavy based pan over medium heat. Tip most of it into the batter and whisk until combined, leaving enough in the pan to coat.

Fry the pancakes in quarter cup portions until bubbles appear and stay open on the top. Flip, and cook until just browned on the other side.

Makes 12 smallish (10-12cm) pancakes

[Edit 12/6/18 – this batter also make great waffles! Just pour a generous 1/2 cup into a Belgian waffle iron and cook according to the instructions.]

Preheat oven to 200c (180C fan forced). Line a 12 cup muffin tin with paper or silicon liners. Whisk together the flour, baking powder, salt, and brown sugar, and stir in the choc chips and coconut or other inclusions – dried fruit, chopped nuts, or berries would all work.

Break up the porridge with a fork, and whisk together with the butter, egg and milk. Quickly stir together the wet and dry ingredients until just combined. Spoon into the muffin tin, and bake for 15-20 minutes until a tester comes out clean.

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21 thoughts on “Our favourite porridge, and left over porridge in pancakes, muffins, and waffles”

Great ideas. I too am a great believer in porridge being the best start to the day. Have never thought about using the leftovers this way though. I have been experimenting with steel cut oats overnight in the slow cooker though. Quite nice with vanilla and coconut milk.😊

I’ve read a lot about using the slow cooker for things like porridge, but unfortunately ours is huge, so I’d have to cook about a kilo to fill it to the right level 😦
If I get a smaller one I’ll give it a go though…and you can try pancakes with your leftovers 🙂

I’m afraid I can’t be convinced on porridge. We never had it as kids, which is probably why but I note that my mum now eats it every day in winter. Having said that, I don’t mind homemade bircher muesli so sometimes I use some in muffins but I had never thought about pancakes. Clever you.

It’s funny the things we’re used to Fiona, I love oat porridge, but my mother also sometimes made a semolina porridge or gruel from a packet called, I think, ‘Breakfast Delight’ which I have never liked as the texture was just too grainy…I love the texture of polenta though!

A very smart post! This is exactly how I’ve always cooked. But even without leftover oats, I used to soak them overnight and then use them in pancakes in the morning for the girls before school, often with raisins and walnuts. They add such a lovely texture, as you know!

Well I found this post really interesting. I recently chucked some left over porridge into pancakes, but overdid the quantity (there was a lot left over) and the pancakes were rather stodgy. It’s great to have some measurement guidelines, Beck. I think the baking powder is probably also essential for lightness. I’ve always tended towards crepes rather than soda pancakes, and wholemeal, rather than white flour. You do need the bubbles to leaven the mixture. Those muffins sound yummy too.